Sure, Lauryn Swann made the decision herself to come play for Adia Barnes and become an Arizona Wildcat. But her mom, Marlena, gets at least a little bit of the credit.
When things werenât going her way the past few years as she battled an ongoing string of injuries â she dislocated her shoulder multiple times in addition to tearing her labrum â Swann made sure to remember what her mom told her as she knuckled down and ground through her recovery.
âJust stay patient and trust Godâs timing,â Swann remembers her mom telling her â even as the hurdles stood in the way of her getting noticed by top college coaches for quite some time into the recruiting cycle.
Swann heeded her momâs advice. She was patient â and determined, with both paying off when Barnes became one of the coaches who did notice her and offered her an opportunity to join a team looking to make an NCAA Tournament appearance for the fifth straight season in 2024-25.
Arizona freshman guard Lauryn Swann works on a passing drill during an UA womenâs basketball summer practice session Tuesday at Richard Jefferson Gymnasium on the UA campus. Swann was the first player to verbally commit to Arizona for the Class of 2024, and the first of that group in Tucson, jumping into workouts ahead of the 2024-25 season.
âLauren has always had this underdog kind of, âI gotta prove somethingâ chip on her shoulder, and I absolutely love her,â Barnes said. âSheâs tough. Sheâs resilient. Sheâs a great kid â comes from a great family. She really aligns with our program. And she can play.
âSheâs not afraid she can really shoot the ball,â Barnes added. âShe was just a late bloomer. And what I love about her and respect is she bet on herself. She couldâve signed with a really small school really early. She bet on herself. She waited. She wanted to go Power Five, and she ended up getting exactly what she wanted, and I love kids like that.â
Swann, who was first in the UAâs 2024 class to commit to play for Arizona, is also the first rookie already in Tucson to start school and summer training. She arrived last Saturday. The others in her class â Mailien Rolf (from Germany) and Katarina Knezevic (from Serbia) â will come to the Arizona campus at a later time.
It was not an easy road for Swann to fulfill her dreams of playing for a power conference program.
âShe completely transformed herself,â Barnes said. âShe got in shape; she got healthy. She was really determined to get what she wanted and she did it. I love those things. I love players with that fearless mentality and the chip on their shoulder. Someone whoâs not afraid to fail and not afraid to bet on themselves.â
Arizona Wildcats guards Jada Williams (front) and Lauryn Swann jostle while working on a ball protection drill during a summer practice session Tuesday at the Richard Jefferson Gymnasium on the UA campus.
Grinding it out
Swannâs original injury came when she was 15 years old chasing down a fast break on defense. She went to swipe the ball and her shoulder popped out. Her coach at the time didnât want to try to put it back into place, so they went to a doctor and âthe roads in New York are horrible, so as we were driving, (on) one of our so many bumps it just put it right back in for me.â
The shoulder popped back out a few more times and the final time before surgery it never got back into place; it stayed out for nearly two weeks. When she returned to the court in her junior year, it was time to get some notice.
With these setbacks, the 5-7 shooting guard wasnât ranked in ESPNâs HoopGurlz Top 100 until this spring, when she landed at No. 81. The day Swann verbally committed to Arizona, she put up 38 points and picked seven steals in a 117-33 win over Brooklyn Law & Tech.
âFor the longest time the longest I couldnât figure out why I wasnât getting any phone calls from schools â this, that, the third,â she said. âBut I feel like it all happens for a reason.
âI definitely have a huge chip on my shoulder to prove people wrong,â she added, âand to just show coach Adia why she was right to pick me and thank her for taking a chance on me.â
She got started in basketball by tagging along when her older siblings, Brandon and Amanda, were at the gym. Brandon, also a guard, taught her the fundamentals; Amanda, who played in the post, gave her advice about shooting and other parts of her game.
Swann describes her game as âNew York guard style of play,â which she said means, âflashy, quick and bring swag.â She also expects to be âa battery packâ â meaning sheâll bring the energy for the Wildcats.
She transferred to Long Island Lutheran for the final two years of high school career.
If that school sounds familiar to Arizona fans, thatâs where her former teammate, former Wildcat Paris Clark, also played. The two were close friends and despite Clark transferring to Virginia after her freshman season, Swann just knew Arizona was the right place for her.
Arizona Wildcats women's basketball assistant coach Bett Shelby talks with freshman guard Lauryn Swann during a summer practice session Tuesday in Tucson.
Finding her fit
Swann narrowed down her choices to Marquette, Clemson and Arizona. She liked so much about Arizona it ended up being an easy decision after she visited the January weekend when Arizona took No. 5 Colorado to the wire at McKale Center. Swann said she liked the energy of the coaches, the beauty of Tucson and especially McKale Center during the game â as well as how the fans interacted with the Wildcats.
That didnât happen at the other schools, she said, adding that she also liked how Barnes coaches and develops her players.
Barnes said Swann could play in either guard position; she will get âopportunities because she wants to be good,â Barnes said, adding that â(Swann) always has to prove herself so she works hard and I donât even think sheâs scratched the surface of how good she can be.â
âSheâs never had this type of strength and conditioning; sheâs never been totally healthy. We were doing all these measurements. Some of the kids have these imbalances and thatâs why they got hurt. They have one leg stronger â like 30% stronger. Or one leg way more flexible and those are high school things. We have the resources here to correct a lot of these imbalances and they just flourish,â Barnes added. âLook at Sky (Jones). She came here really frail, skinny, long athlete and now sheâs more explosive. Sheâs stronger sheâs gained like 10-15 pounds of muscle and look at her. We have the resources to really build you up and make you better.â
Rim Shots
Registration is now open for the 2024 Adia Barnes Basketball Academy, serving girls in second through 12th grades, and boys in second through eighth grades.
This year’s five-day camp runs June 17-21 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in McKale Center. Fees are $395 per camper; to register, contact Lauren Flaum at lflaum@arizona.edu.
Cydnee Bryant, sister of menâs basketball freshman Carter Bryant, took an unofficial visit to Arizona over the weekend. She is No. 34 in HoopGurlz Super 60 for the Class of 2026.
Arizona gave an offer to Noelle Guiamatsia in the same class. She is a 6-4 forward out of Xavier College Preparatory and is No. 43 by HoopGurlz. Guiamatsia is a legacy player as her mom and aunt â the Bofia twins, Suzy and Beatrice, who were both 6-7 inches tall â played at Arizona from 2006-2008.
Arizona women's basketball coach Adia Barnes speaks to assembled media on June 11, 2024 about how she approached the transfer portal this year and what kinds of players she was looking for to join the Wildcats. (Video courtesy Arizona Athletics)
Arizona women's basketball coach Adia Barnes speaks to assembled media on June 11, 2024 about recent Big 12 meetings ahead of the Wildcats' official move from the Pac-12 to Big 12 this summer. (Video courtesy Arizona Athletics)
Arizona women's basketball coach Adia Barnes speaks to assembled media on June 11, 2024 about her team's deeper roster in 2024-25. (Video courtesy Arizona Athletics)
Arizona women's basketball coach Adia Barnes speaks to assembled media on June 11, 2024 about the departure of Courtney Blakely, who transferred back to Middle Tennessee, where she initially played before transferring to the UA. (Video courtesy Arizona Athletics)
Arizona women's basketball coach Adia Barnes speaks to assembled media on June 11, 2024 about new Wildcat forward Sahnya Jah, a transfer to the UA from South Carolina. (Video courtesy Arizona Athletics)
Arizona women's basketball coach Adia Barnes speaks to assembled media on June 11, 2024 about the futures of Olympic sports and women's sports on college campuses. (Video courtesy Arizona Athletics)
Arizona women's basketball coach Adia Barnes speaks to assembled media on June 11, 2024 about Caitlin Clark's impact and the decision to leave Clark off the U.S. Olympic team. (Video courtesy Arizona Athletics)
Arizona women's basketball coach Adia Barnes speaks to assembled media on June 11, 2024 about the impact of money on the transfer portal. (Video courtesy Arizona Athletics)
Arizona women's basketball coach Adia Barnes speaks to assembled media on June 11, 2024 about what former walk-ons Brooklyn Rhodes and Erin Tack bring to the UA program in their season seasons with the team. (Video courtesy Arizona Athletics)



